Buda Gautama

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Gautama Buddha, the “Compassionate One,” holds the office of Lord of the World (referred to as “God of the Earth” in Revelation 11:4), hierarch of the etheric retreat at Shamballa (over the Gobi desert), where he sustains the threefold flame of life for the evolutions of Earth. Gautama (who was embodied as Siddhartha Gautama c. 563 B.C.), is the great teacher of enlightenment through the soul’s mastery of the Ten Perfections, the Four Noble Truths, and the Eightfold Path, and sponsor of Summit University and of the mission of the Mother of the Flame to carry the torch of illumination for the age.

Gautama came in an hour when Hinduism was at its worst state of decadence. The priesthood was involved in favoritism and guarding the great secrets, the real mysteries of God, from the people, thus keeping the masses in ignorance. The caste system had become a means of imprisonment of the soul instead of a means of liberation through dharma. Born as Prince Siddhartha, he left palace, power, wife and son to gain that enlightenment whereby he could give back to the people that which the interlopers had taken from them.

Early life

Gautama Buddha, was born Siddhartha Gautama in northern India. He was the son of King Suddhodana and Queen Mahamaya, rulers of the Sakya kingdom, and thus a member of the Kshatriya (warrior or ruling) caste.

Ancient Pali texts and Buddhist scriptures record that before his birth, his mother, Mahamaya, dreamt that a beautiful silver-white elephant entered her womb through her side. Brahmins, called to interpret the dream, foretold the birth of a son who would become either a universal monarch or a buddha.

During the last days of her pregnancy, the queen began a journey to Devadaha to visit her parents, as was the custom in India. On the way she stopped with her attendants at Lumbini Park and reached for a flowering branch of a sal tree. There, under the blossoming tree, the Buddha was born on the full-moon day of the month of May.

Al quinto día después de nacer, ciento ocho brahmanes fueron invitados a una ceremonia de otorgamiento de nombre en el palacio. El rey convocó a ocho de los más cultos de entre ellos para que «leyeran » el destino del niño, interpretando sus marcas corporales y características físicas.

Siete de ellos estuvieron de acuerdo en que si permanecía en el hogar, llegaría a ser un rey universal, unificando a la India, pero si se marchaba, se convertiría en el Buda y eliminaría el velo de ignorancia del mundo. Kondañña, el octavo y más joven del grupo, declaró que con seguridad llegaría a ser un Buda, renunciando al mundo después de ver cuatro señales: un anciano, un enfermo, un muerto y un santo.

El niño recibió el nombre de Siddhartha, o «aquel cuya meta está realizada». Siete días después de nacer, su madre falleció y él fue criado por su hermana Mahaprajapati, que después se convirtió en una de sus primeras discípulas femeninas.

El rey, preocupado por la posibilidad de perder a su heredero, tomó todas las precauciones posibles para proteger a su hijo del dolor y el sufrimiento, rodeándole de todos los lujos concebibles, incluyendo tres palacios y cuarenta mil bailarinas.

In the Anguttara Nikāya (a canonical text), Gautama describes his upbringing in his own words:

I was tenderly cared for,... supremely so, infinitely so. At my father’s palace, lotus pools were built for me, in one place for blue lotus flowers, in one place for white lotus flowers, and in one place for red lotus flowers, blossoming for my sake.... Day and night a white umbrella was held over me, so that I might not be troubled by cold, heat, dust, chaff, or dew. I dwelt in three palaces,... in one, during the cold; in one, in the summer; and in one, during the rainy season. While in the palace of the rainy season, surrounded by musicians, singers, and female dancers, for four months I did not descend from the palace....[1]

A los dieciséis años de edad, después de demostrar su destreza en una competición de armas, el príncipe Siddhartha se casó con su hermosa prima Yasodhara. Pronto se volvió pensativo y preocupado, pero el momento decisivo de su vida no le llegó hasta la edad de veintinueve años, cuando emprendió cuatro viajes, los cuales, a su vez, presentaron las cuatro visiones pasajeras.

Primero se encontró con un hombre muy viejo, canoso y decrépito, apoyado en un bastón; segundo, un hombre en estado lastimoso atormentado con enfermedades, tumbado en el camino; tercero, un cadáver; y cuarto, un monje vestido de amarillo con la cabeza afeitada y un cuenco de mendigo. Muy emocionado por la compasión de las tres primeras visiones, comprendió que la vida estaba sujeta a la vejez, la enfermedad y la muerte. La cuarta visión significó para él la posibilidad de superar esas condiciones y le inspiró a abandonar el mundo que conocía con el fin de hallar una solución al sufrimiento.

Buddha’s Renunciation, Nicholas Chevalier (1884)

Asceticism

De vuelta al palacio, recibió la noticia del nacimiento de su hijo, a quien llamó Rahula, u «obstáculo». Esa noche ordenó a su auriga que ensillara a su caballo favorito, Kanthaka. Antes de abandonar la ciudad, fue a la habitación para echar un vistazo de despedida a su esposa e hijo dormidos. Cabalgó toda la noche y al amanecer asumió la apariencia de un asceta, intercambiando vestiduras con su auriga, a quien envió al palacio de su padre.

Así, Gautama comenzó la vida de monje ambulante. Inmediatamente fue a la búsqueda de los mejores instructores del momento para que le instruyeran en la verdad, llegando a dominar con rapidez todo lo que le enseñaron. Insatisfecho e inquieto, decidió encontrar una verdad permanente, inmune a las ilusiones del mundo.

Al viajar por la tierra de Magadha, fue observado por su bella apariencia y su noble estatura. Llegó a la aldea llamada Senanigama, cerca de Uruvela, donde se le unió un grupo de cinco ascetas, entre los cuales estaba Kondañña, el brahmán que había predicho que llegaría a ser un Buda.

Here, for almost six years, Gautama practiced severe austerities, which are recorded in his own words in the Majjhima Nikāya:

Because of so little nourishment, all my limbs became like some withered creepers with knotted joints;... the pupils of my eyes appeared sunk deep in their sockets as water appears shining at the bottom of a deep well;... the skin of my belly came to be cleaving to my back-bone....[2]

As a consequence of these severe bodily mortifications, Gautama became so weak that he once fainted and was believed to be dead. Some accounts describe how he was found collapsed by a shepherd boy who restored him with drops of warm milk. Others say it was the devas, or gods, who revived him. Realizing the futility of asceticism, Gautama abandoned his austerities to seek his own path of enlightenment—whereupon his five companions rejected and deserted him.

The Bo tree

The Mahabodhi temple in Bodhgaya, India. The tree under which the Buddha attained enlightenment is on the left.

Un día, Sujata, la hija de un aldeano, le alimentó con leche de arroz sustanciosa: una «comida tan maravillosa… que nuestro Señor sintió volver la fuerza y la vida como si las noches vigilando y los días ayunando hubieran pasado en sueño»163. Y entonces, solo, se puso rumbo al árbol Bo, donde prometió permanecer hasta estar totalmente iluminado. Por lo tanto, se ha conocido como el Punto Inmóvil.

At that point, Mara, the Evil One, attempted to prevent his enlightenment and confronted him with temptations much in the same manner that Satan tested Jesus during his fasting in the wilderness.

The Dhammapada records the words of Mara, as she assailed Gautama: “Lean, suffering, ill-favored man, Live! Death is your neighbor. Death has a thousand hands, you have only two. Live! Live and do good, live holy, and taste reward. Why do you struggle? Hard is struggle, hard to struggle all the time.”

Impasible, se quedó sentado bajo el árbol Bo mientras Mara continuaba con su ataque; primero en forma de deseo, haciendo desfilar diosas voluptuosas y muchachas danzantes ante él, luego en forma de muerte, asaltándole con huracanes, lluvias torrenciales, piedras ardientes, barro hirviendo, fieros soldados y bestias; y, finalmente, la oscuridad. Empero, Gautama permaneció impasible.

Como último recurso, la tentadora desafió su derecho de hacer lo que estaba haciendo. Siddhartha entonces golpeó ligeramente la tierra,[3] y la tierra hizo tronar su respuesta: «¡Soy testigo!». Todas las huestes del Señor y los seres elementales respondieron y aclamaron su derecho de buscar la iluminación del Buda, con lo cual Mara huyó.

Habiendo derrotado a Mara, Gautama pasó el resto de la noche en meditación profunda bajo el árbol, comprendiendo las Cuatro Nobles Verdades. En sus propias palabras grabadas: «La ignorancia se disipó, surgió el conocimiento. La oscuridad se disipó, surgió la luz».[4]

Así alcanzó la Iluminación, o el Despertar, durante la noche de luna llena del mes de mayo, aproximadamente en el año 528 a.C. Su ser fue transformado, y se convirtió en el Buda.

The event was of cosmic import. All created things filled the morning air with their rejoicings and the earth quaked six ways with wonder. Ten thousand galaxies shuddered in awe as lotuses bloomed on every tree, turning the entire universe into “a bouquet of flowers sent whirling through the air.”[5]

Durante un total de cuarenta y nueve días permaneció en profundo éxtasis, tras lo cual volvió su atención de nuevo al mundo. Encontró a Mara esperándole con una última tentación: «¿Cómo puede ponerse en palabras tu experiencia? Regresa al nirvana. No intentes entregar tu mensaje al mundo, porque nadie lo entenderá. ¡Sigue en la dicha!». Pero Buda contestó: «Los habrá que entenderán», y Mara se desvaneció de su vida para siempre.

Teaching

Sarnath, India, the stupa marking the site where Gautama preached his first sermon

Contemplating whom he should first teach, he decided to return to the five ascetics who had left him. He began a journey of over one hundred miles to Benares and delivered to his old companions his first sermon, known as the Dhammacakkappavattana-sutta, or “Setting in Motion the Wheel of Truth.”

At the end of the sermon, in which he revealed the key discovery of his quest—the Four Noble Truths, the Eightfold Path, and the Middle Way—he accepted the five monks as the first members of his order. Kondañña was the first to grasp the teaching.

For forty-five years, Gautama walked the dusty roads of India, preaching the Dhamma (universal Doctrine), which led to the founding of Buddhism. He established the sangha (community) that soon numbered over twelve hundred devotees, eventually including his entire family—his father, aunt, wife, and son. When the people questioned him as to his identity, he answered, “I am awake”—hence, the Buddha, meaning “Enlightened One” or “Awakened One.”

Passing

At the age of eighty, Gautama became seriously ill and almost died, but revived himself, thinking it was not right to die without preparing his disciples. By sheer determination, he recovered and instructed Ananda, his cousin and close disciple, that the order should live by making themselves an island—by becoming their own refuge and making the Dhamma their island, their refuge forever.

After announcing that he would die in three months, he traveled through several villages and then stayed with Cunda, the goldsmith, one of his devoted followers. According to generally accepted tradition, Cunda invited Gautama to partake of sukara-maddava—a dish he had prepared unknowingly with poisoned mushrooms. After the meal, Gautama became violently ill, but bore his pain without complaint.

His only concern was to console Cunda, who might feel responsible for his death. And thus, he compassionately asked Ananda to tell Cunda that of all the meals he had eaten, only two stood out as special blessings—one was the meal served by Sujata before his enlightenment, and the other was the food from Cunda which opened the gates to his transition.

He passed during the full-moon of May, c. 483 B.C., after again advising Ananda that the Dhamma—the Truth—must be his master and reminding the monks of the transiency of all conditioned things.

Legacy

Following the passing of Gautama, Buddhism began to develop in two major directions, leading to the establishment of the Hinayana (“little vehicle”) and the Mahayana (“great vehicle”) schools of Buddhism, from which many further subgroups evolved.

Adherents of the Hinayana school believe their teachings represent the original Buddhist doctrine taught by Gautama, and therefore refer to their path as the Theravada, or “Way of the Elders.”

The traditional Theravadin outlook centers around the monastic way of life and emphasizes the necessity for self-sacrifice and individual enlightenment in order to help others. Their goal is to become an arhat—perfected disciple—and enter Nirvana.

The Mahayanists, who believe that the Theravadins’ strict observance of precepts departs from the true spirit of the Buddha, concentrate more on emulating the Buddha’s life, stressing good works and compassion toward others in the process of gaining enlightenment. The Theravadins, however, claim that the Mahayanists have polluted the pure stream of Gautama’s teaching by incorporating more liberal doctrines and interpretations.

The Mahayanists consider their school to be the “greater vehicle,” as it provides more for the layman. Their ideal is to become a bodhisattva—one who attains Nirvana but voluntarily returns to the world to assist others in obtaining the same goal.

Gautama’s work today

Gautama Buddha was the first initiate to serve under Sanat Kumara, hence the one chosen to succeed him in the office of Lord of the World. On January 1, 1956, Sanat Kumara placed his mantle on Lord Gautama, whereupon the Chela par excellence of the Great Guru also became the hierarch of Shamballa.

Gautama Buddha today holds the office of Lord of the World (referred to as “God of the Earth” in Revelation 11:4). At inner levels, he sustains the threefold flame of life, the divine spark, for all children of God on earth.

Speaking of the great service Lord Gautama renders to all life in his office as Lord of the World, Maitreya said on January 1, 1986:

The Lord of the World does sustain the threefold flame in the evolutions of earth by a filigree light extending from his heart. This, then, is the bypassing of the individual’s karma whereby there is so much blackness around the heart that the spiritual arteries or the crystal cord have been cut off.

The comparison of this is seen when the arteries in the physical body become so clogged with debris that the area of the flow of blood becomes greatly diminished until it becomes a point of insufficiency and the heart can no longer sustain life. This is comparable to what has happened on the astral plane.

So Sanat Kumara came to earth to keep the flame of life. And so does Gautama Buddha keep this threefold flame at Shamballa, and he is a part of every living heart. Therefore, as the disciple approaches the Path, he understands that its goal is to come to the place where the threefold flame is developed enough here below within his own heart that indeed, with or without the filigree thread from the heart of Gautama Buddha, he is able to sustain life and soul and consciousness and the initiatic path.

Beloved ones, this step in itself is an accomplishment that few upon this planet have attained to. You have no idea how you would feel or be or behave if Gautama Buddha withdrew from you that support of the filigree thread and the momentum of his own heartbeat and threefold flame. Most people, especially the youth, do not take into consideration what is the source of the life that they experience in exuberance and joy.

Of this gift, Gautama himself said on December 31, 1983:

I am very observant. I observe you by the contact of my flame through the thread-contact I maintain to the threefold flame of your heart—sustaining it as I do until you pass from the seat-of-the-soul chakra to the very heart of hearts [the secret chamber of the heart], and you yourself are able by attainment to sustain that flame and its burning in this octave.

Did anyone here ever recall himself igniting his own threefold flame at birth? Has anyone here ever remembered tending its fire or keeping it burning? Beloved hearts, recognize that acts of love and valor and honor and selflessness surely contribute to this flame. But a higher power and a higher Source does keep that flame until you, yourself, are one with that higher power—your own Christ Self.

Therefore, all receive the boost of my heart flame and impetus. And as that light passes through me from the Godhead, I therefore perceive many things about you and your everyday life that you might think beyond mention or notice of a Lord of the World, who must be, indeed, very busy.

Well, indeed, I am! But I am never too busy to notice the elements of the Path presented by parents and in families and communities and in the schoolrooms of life everywhere. For I make it my business to see to it that some element of the path of initiation, moving toward the heart of Jesus and Maitreya, is a part of the life of every growing child.

Retreats

Gautama Buddha is the sponsor of Summit University and the hierarch of Shamballa, the etheric retreat of the Lord of the World located over the Gobi Desert. In 1981, Gautama established an extension of this retreat, called the Western Shamballa, in the etheric octave over the Heart of the Inner Retreat at the Royal Teton Ranch.

Gautama Buddha’s keynote is “Moonlight and Roses.” The “Ode to Joy” from Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony also gives us direct attunement with the Lord of the World.

See also

Tathagata

Sources

Pearls of Wisdom, vol. 26, no. 4, January 23, 1983.

Pearls of Wisdom, vol. 32, no. 30, July 23, 1989.

Mark L. Prophet and Elizabeth Clare Prophet, The Masters and Their Retreats, s.v. “Gautama Buddha.”

Elizabeth Clare Prophet, Inner Perspectives.

  1. Helena Roerich, Foundations of Buddhism (New York: Agni Yoga Society, 1971), p. 7.
  2. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 15th ed., s.v. “Buddha.”
  3. Con el «mudra de tocar la tierra», mano izquierda sobre el regazo con la palma hacia arriba, mano derecha con la palma hacia abajo tocando la tierra.
  4. Edward J. Thomas, The Life of Buddha as Legend and History (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1927), pp. 66-68, quoted in Clarence H. Hamilton, ed., Buddhism: A Religion of Infinite Compassion (New York: The Liberal Arts Press, 1952), pp. 22–23.
  5. Huston Smith, The Religions of Man (New York: Harper & Row, Harper Colophon Books, 1958), p. 84.